8 / 10
The Mother and the Whore is the Jean Eustache-directed French art film that became one of the most-discussed European productions of the post-May-1968 period. Eustache wrote and directed. The film runs three hours and thirty-seven minutes and consists almost entirely of dialogue between three characters in Parisian apartments and cafés. Jean-Pierre Léaud plays Alexandre, a self-styled intellectual who lives with his older girlfriend Marie and pursues other relationships openly. Bernadette Lafont plays Marie, who works in a dress shop and supports Alexandre financially. Françoise Lebrun plays Veronika, a Polish nurse Alexandre meets at a café and brings into his arrangement with Marie. Isabelle Weingarten plays Gilberte, Alexandre’s former girlfriend who appears briefly in the opening sequence. The plot follows the development of the triangular relationship across approximately a month of Paris in the early 1970s.
The film was produced on a modest budget in 1972 and premiered at the 1973 Cannes Film Festival where it won the Grand Prix Spécial du Jury. The reception was polarized. Some critics identified it as the major French film of the decade. Others objected to the runtime, the explicit content, and what they saw as the script’s misogynistic dialogue passing as social observation. Eustache continued making films for another nine years before his suicide in 1981. The Mother and the Whore is consistently cited as his masterpiece and as a foundational text for European art cinema’s late-twentieth-century engagement with the failures of the 1968 generation.
The Dialogue Commitment
The film’s most distinctive structural choice is its almost exclusive reliance on extended dialogue. Three hours and thirty-seven minutes of running time consist primarily of conversation between the three central characters. The dialogue runs at unusually high density. Long monologues, philosophical exchanges, and explicit sexual conversation all proceed at conversational pace. Eustache refused to cut. The audience experiences the relationship through accumulated speech rather than through montage or action.
The commitment is partly economic (a dialogue-heavy production is cheaper to make than an action-heavy one) and partly aesthetic. Eustache argued that the post-1968 generation’s actual lives consisted largely of conversation. The political fervor of 1968 had collapsed. The intellectual ambitions remained. The result was talk that did not lead to action. The film documents this condition by replicating it. The audience absorbs the talkiness as the actual content. The technique is structurally difficult and the runtime is the cost. Most viewers either commit to the experience or refuse it. The middle ground is rare.
For Writers
A long work that commits to a single structural choice can produce immersion that shorter works with varied structures cannot match. The Mother and the Whore is almost entirely dialogue across three and a half hours. The structural commitment is the experience. The lesson is that strong long fiction sometimes requires sustained commitment to one approach rather than continuous variation. Readers who commit to the form will absorb the work differently than readers expecting variety. Decide what kind of work you are making. The decision determines who your readers will be.
The Alexandre
Jean-Pierre Léaud plays Alexandre as a specific kind of post-1968 male failure. The character is articulate, charming, and unemployed. He has theories about everything and accomplishes nothing. He treats women as accessories to his self-presentation. He cites philosophical positions to justify behavior the philosophers he cites would not have endorsed. The performance commits absolutely to the character’s specific narcissism. Léaud does not soften Alexandre. The audience is forced to spend three and a half hours with a man who is not the protagonist the audience would have chosen.
The casting is one of the film’s sharpest decisions. Léaud had been the face of the French New Wave since François Truffaut cast him as Antoine Doinel in The 400 Blows (1959). The character followed Léaud across five films and twenty years. Alexandre is the post-Antoine version. The boy who represented French cinema’s optimistic post-war youth has aged into a self-absorbed talker who has converted his charm into a manipulation strategy. The casting carries the film’s actual argument about what happened to the 1968 generation. The boy of The 400 Blows became Alexandre. The cultural inheritance failed.
For Writers
Casting that draws on an actor’s accumulated career history can produce thematic content that the script alone cannot deliver. Léaud’s Alexandre carries the weight of the French New Wave’s failed promises. The audience reads the character through twenty years of accumulated context. The lesson is that creative collaborators bring their own biographies into the work. Choose your collaborators with awareness of what their histories will contribute. The reader or viewer reads both the work and the people who made it.
The Veronika
Françoise Lebrun’s Veronika is the film’s most committed performance and the source of its most-discussed sequences. The character is a Polish nurse who has been having casual sex with multiple partners in post-1968 Paris and who develops a specific kind of complicated relationship with Alexandre. Lebrun’s third-act monologues about her sexual history, her childhood, and her current emotional state run for extended takes without cuts. The monologues are partially scripted and partially improvised. Lebrun’s commitment to the material is sustained throughout.
The performance has been read multiple ways across fifty years. Some readings emphasize Veronika as the film’s actual protagonist (the character whose interior the script eventually privileges). Other readings emphasize the script’s continued framing of Veronika through Alexandre’s perspective. The third-act monologues have been variously interpreted as authentic feminine testimony, as Eustache’s projection through a female character, or as something more complicated that the script itself does not resolve. The film leaves the interpretation open. The performance carries the material regardless of how it is read.
For Writers
An extended monologue from a character whose interior has been previously withheld can produce more impact than the same content delivered through dialogue. Veronika speaks at length late in the film. The accumulated silence makes the speech land. The lesson is that withholding character interior can be a tool for later impact. If the reader has not heard the character’s perspective for two hours, the character’s eventual perspective will carry weight that earlier delivery could not have achieved. Use silence strategically. Reveal interior when the reveal is structurally maximally effective.
Craft Note
The film’s closing monologue by Veronika is the most economical statement of Eustache’s actual argument. After three and a half hours of accumulated dialogue, Veronika delivers an extended speech that runs approximately fifteen minutes in a single sustained take. The speech covers her sexual history, her family in Poland, her experiences with multiple men in Paris, her assessment of Alexandre, and her decision about what she wants from her life. Lebrun delivers the speech with sustained emotional commitment. The camera does not cut. The audience is forced to sit with the speech for its full duration. The technique demonstrates how a long film can earn an extended single-take monologue through accumulated investment in the speaker. Veronika could not have delivered this speech in the first hour. The film has prepared the audience for fifteen minutes of one woman talking by making fifteen minutes of one woman talking possible only at the end.
The Verdict
8/10. One of the major French films of the 1970s and a foundational text for European art cinema’s engagement with the post-1968 generation. Jean Eustache’s structural commitment to dialogue, Jean-Pierre Léaud’s casting against his accumulated career history, and Françoise Lebrun’s closing monologue all earn the film’s standing. The film loses points for the runtime, for stretches where the dialogue density becomes punishing, and for the script’s specific gender politics which have aged in complicated ways. Watch it if you have the patience and the interest. The film does not reward casual viewing.
FAQ
Is the film really that long?
Yes. The runtime is three hours and thirty-seven minutes. The pacing is deliberately slow. The commitment is part of the experience.
How did Eustache die?
Eustache committed suicide in 1981 at age forty-two. His career had been productive but commercially limited. The Mother and the Whore was his most successful production.
What about the gender politics?
The film’s depiction of women has been variously read across five decades. Some readings find Veronika’s third-act monologues to represent genuine feminine testimony. Others find Eustache’s overall framing problematic. The conversation continues.
How explicit is the content?
Substantially. The film contains extended sexual dialogue and some nudity. The explicit content was controversial in 1973 and remains a factor in current reception.
Who is Françoise Lebrun?
French actress. The Mother and the Whore was her debut feature. She has continued working in French cinema for fifty years, most recently in Gaspar Noé’s Vortex (2021). Her performance in The Mother and the Whore remains her most-cited.
Is Veronika autobiographical for the actress?
Partially. Lebrun and Eustache had a personal relationship during the production. The character draws on Lebrun’s actual biography. The line between performance and testimony is deliberately blurred.
Should I watch this?
If you are interested in European art cinema, in post-1968 cultural history, or in extended dialogue-driven film. Otherwise the runtime may be more demanding than the rewards justify.